Applying the Rules!

Wheyayeman

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The rules of golf at times can be complicated, unjust, subjective or just plain wrong (In the eyes of individual golfers), so after reading the thread regarding hitting a tree on a practice swing and numerous other threads about rules which in the grand scheme of things won't actually alter the players score. I was wondering how stringent everyone is when applying the rules in a bounce game or medal?

For example I was playing in a comp last weekend and one of our group pulled his drive into the rough, we had a look without success and he eventually told us to just carry on (stableford comp so he was prepared to scratch the hole), on his way back to his bag he found his ball, and asked if he was within his 5 minutes, as none of us had actually checked the time and it seemed less than 5 minutes we felt he was in his rights to play on. However if we had checked the time and he found his ball after 5mins 4secs, officially his ball is lost but is that something you would pull a fellow competitor up on with such a minor infringement. Likewise if for example a ball lands in the trees and the player moves some loose impediments around his ball, which consequently move his ball a quarter role into a worse lie, the player should be given a penalty shot, but is the ball being in a worse/harder lie penalty enough?

What I'm asking is not to debate the individual rules but if when faced with a subjective rule or a minor infringement where the player receives no benefit, Would you pull them up on it in a competition?
 
in a comp definately you have to pull them on it, you would actually be disqualified yourself if you knowingly allow someone to break a rule without pulling them on it.
 
i think the clear point here is its a medal/comp. last week with a very good card going (20 pts front 9) and after 10 i was on 22... get to 11, a midhit out of a bunker saw my ball come to rest under a low tree, we all see it land there yet couldnt find it, after what seemed like 5 mins i called it on lost ball and avised them to walk on, but my partners still offered to look as it was a potential winning card, as it was 37 points saw me come 2nd, not enough for a cut but more importantly i lost by a point,had the ball been found, i had thwe chance for a point atleast and a possible cut but we declared it gone.

in comps you have to play to the rules, but in bounce games im a little more slack... but not alot.
 
Fraid golf, as with any other sport or game played to a set of rules, is just as likely to suffer not just rule breaches (which are a why a rule exist in the first place) but lots of ignorance & non-application of the penalty (more than most would care to admit to)

The game isn't the worse for it, its just symptomatic of the competitive aspect of the game
 
I find in bounce games some of the drops are not as precise as they would be in a comp. I rarely see anyone getting their driver out and marking with tee pegs whereas they generally do in comps
 
I'm with you on this one




Me too.
An infringment is a breaking of the rules.
Its better to know the rules to the best of your ability.
Its also better not to have an infingment in a comp that
you could easily take for granted in a bounce game.
Definately like the 3 rules in the GM mag,helps test the knowledge.
 
In comps, 100% follow the rules. Yes, I do put the stopwatch on a ball search.

In bounce games, they're never strokeplay for us, the only rule we don't follow is stroke and distance for a lost ball but you're out of the hole anyway - just knocking on for practice.
 
On another golf blog, someone asked for what they thought was the most common broken rule.

It came out as 'advising' your playing to 'take your time'.

I think that this was a reference to the most common penalty on tour - and referred to 'pace of play' penalties rather than advice.....:temper:
 
in a comp definately you have to pull them on it, you would actually be disqualified yourself if you knowingly allow someone to break a rule without pulling them on it.

You 'should' pull them on it perhaps, but you don't "definitely have to". You can ignore someones breach of the Rules, however you would both be DQ'd if you agree to waive a rule. Rule 1 - 3
 
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